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Japan’s opposition Democratic Party chooses new leader

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Newly-elected leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Katsuya Okada speaks at a press conference in Tokyo. Photo: Xinhua

Japan’s leading opposition Democratic Party on Sunday chose 61-year-old Harvard-trained former Deputy Prime Minister Katsuya Okada as its top leader.

Okada won a runoff vote against Goshi Hosono after another contender, former Health Minister Akira Nagatsuma, was eliminated in the first round. He faces the daunting challenge of uniting and rebuilding public trust in the Democratic Party, which has yet to recover from its electoral defeat by the Liberal Democrats in late 2012.

The Liberal Democrats further secured their dominance of Japanese politics in a snap election last month called by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to seek support for his economic policies and conservative political agenda.

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After his win, Okada vowed to restore his party’s prestige, saying Japan needs a viable opposition to counter the Liberal Democrats. Like many others in his party, he split with the Liberal Democrats years ago.

Okada is a lawyer who, like many Japanese politicians, was educated at elite Tokyo University. But he also spent time studying at Harvard. His father co-founded the Japanese retailing giant Aeon Group.

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